Dangerous Waters: Reassessing Conflict in the South China Sea

These days, all is not smooth sailing in the South China Sea. Despite violence throughout Asia during the decades-long Cold War, the South China Sea remained calm. But starting in 2010, with the rapid economic and military rise of China and the United States’ so-called “pivot to Asia,” the waters that lap the shores of China, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei, and Taiwan have grown choppy. From harsh words to physical confrontations, the situation is tense. In response, some conventional discourse today argues that China’s aggressive pursuit of territorial control in the South China Sea results from a Chinese long-game desire to replace the United States as the sole hegemonic power, first in the region, then in the world.[1] Many also argue America should – indeed must – adopt a confrontational approach in the South China Sea, empower its small allies and partners in the region, squash Chinese ambitions, and protect American interests and prestige—even if it leads to war.[2]

Those interpretations and policy approaches are incorrect and dangerous. First, China’s expansion of power and development in the South China Sea should not be seen primarily as an outward-looking attempt to usurp global U.S. power but rather, as V.I. Lenin would have it, part of an ongoing, inward-looking attempt by China’s leaders to find an outlet for excess domestic capital. The countries that rim the South China Sea, along with other nations around the world that form links of China’s amorphous and ever-ballooning Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), form major outlets for the over-productive forces at work within China. For China, military development in the South China Sea guarantees protection of the trade and investments necessitated by internal economic pressure. It does not advance revisionist designs for global domination. China worries unless it can solve the structural problems that plague its economy, economic crisis could destabilize the communist regime.

Nevertheless, the growing power and prestige that enable China’s imperialist projects in Southeast Asia signal a growing disequilibrium in the world. Concerned U.S. policymakers, instead of falling for the popular, incomplete, and misleading “Thucydides Trap” analysis,[3] should turn to Robert Gilpin’s theory of hegemonic transition and war for a more complete understanding of the international forces at work in the South China Sea. While a great power sea change does seem to be occurring in Asia, the United States can avoid hegemonic war there by understanding Gilpin’s thesis and pursuing a careful policy of appeasement and accommodation in the South China Sea. To do otherwise could be disastrous for the global stability.

These dual reexaminations of the situation in the South China Sea could calm the waters there and avoid a capsizing of both American and Chinese power.

Nature and Scope

The 1.4-million-square-mile South China Sea is some of the most important maritime territory on planet Earth. More than $3.3 trillion of trade sailed through its island-speckled waters in 2016, as well as 40 percent of the world’s global liquified natural gas. Beneath waters sit an additional 190 trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 11 billion barrels of untapped oil, according to the Council on Foreign Relations. [4] Bilateral trade between China and Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), meanwhile, hit $514.8 billion in 2017, up 13.8 percent on the year, continuing a trend of rising trade between China and its neighbors around the South China Sea. Of that, Chinese exports accounted for $279.1 billion, 9 percent growth year-over-year, for a Chinese trade surplus with ASEAN of $43.4 billion in 2017.[5] Twenty-one of China’s 39 maritime trade routes and 60 percent of its trade passes by the South China Sea’s contested Spratly Islands, claimed by China, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Vietnam. [6] Tellingly, as of Spring 2018, the Spratlys are home to Chinese missile systems.[7]

Adding to the South China Sea’s economic importance, nearly all of China’s oil arrives through Southeast Asia from the Middle East via Malaysia’s Strait of Malacca. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, in 2015 nearly one-third of the world’s liquid petroleum products transported by sea moved through the Strait of Malacca, which is only about 1.7 miles wide.[8] Four-fifths of all China’s ship-transported oil arrives through those straits and then the South China Sea. [9] China, which cannot prevent other international actors from disrupting its sea lanes and which must rely instead of the United States to guarantee freedom of navigation,[10] tends to view its trade and oil security “through the prism of American-Japanese containment.”[11] It worries that a terrorist attack, natural disaster, or most likely a military crisis with the United States over Taiwan could close straits throughout Southeast Asia’s waters, cutting off China’s oil supply and trade routes and disrupting its economy.

Lastly, investments in the region are a burgeoning piece of China’s global investment portfolio under its BRI and 21st Century Maritime Silk Road. Chinese outward foreign investment in ASEAN countries amounted to $14.7 billion dollars in 2017. Chinese investment and construction projects have flowed into all Southeast Asian countries, made possible by those trade and energy links through the South China Sea. Key partners include Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, and Indonesia. [12] They form the beginning of an over-sea economic chain China intends to link to the Middle East and Europe. China is now the third largest global investor in ASEAN behind Japan and ASEAN countries themselves,[13] and analysts expect Chinese investment in Southeast Asia to continue to grow, even as US investment declines as a share of the total.[14]

China’s military capabilities have exploded in the South China Sea alongside its investments. In 2009, China released maps showing an ambiguous “Nine-Dash Line” encompassing most of the South China Sea.[15] Although the meaning and legal basis of the line are unclear, the line created an outcry among Brunei, the Philippines, Malaysia, Taiwan, and Vietnam, all of which contest some of China’s territorial claims in the sea. Indonesia does not claim any territory there, but the nine-dash line does overlap with its exclusive economic zone.[16] In the years after 2009, China began building artificial islands – 3,200 acres of new land by 2018 – on reefs and rocks throughout the area encompassed by the dashed line, some of them military installations with missile launchers, hangars and runways, ports, and barracks. It also beefed up its coast guard and naval capabilities.[17] China now challenges foreign traffic in the area, including American military boats on freedom of navigation exercises and American reconnaissance flights.[18] China insists foreign vessels get permission before entering the area, and Chinese craft have intercepted American air force planes and forced American navy ships off course.[19] Chinese coast guard vessels have even run local fishing boats out of contested territory.[20] The U.S. insists all these activities violate freedom of navigation principles that are instrumental to ensuring unobstructed trade worldwide. Those principles, perhaps not incidentally, also guarantee U.S. military access to the region.[21] A 2016 United Nations court ruling in favor of the Philippines against China under the 1982 Law of the Sea Convention did not stop China’s projects in the disputed areas. Instead, China doubled its efforts to build better diplomatic relations with the Philippines and other affected countries while it continued to build.[22] Although China assures the United States it will not interfere with “innocent passage” of trade vessels through its claimed territory, the militarized South China Sea is now effectively China’s.[23]

“In short, China is now capable of controlling the South China Sea in all scenarios short of war with the United States,” Admiral Philip S. Davidson told Congress in May 2018.[24]

But why does China want to control the South China Sea?

Island Building: The Highest Stage of Capitalism

Although geostrategic concerns do play some part in China’s development of the South China Sea, a more important aspect of China’s activities there is its attempt to stave off a domestic economic crisis. China needs adequate outlets for overcapacity in its industrial sector and for its over-accumulating capital. China, V.I. Lenin, would argue, has reached the highest stage of capitalism: imperialism.[25]

In his outline of the origins of imperialism, Lenin argues capitalism – and despite its moniker, China’s ruling Chinese Communist Party is at this point unabashedly capitalist – invariably leads to imperialism.

“Economically, the main thing in this process [of capitalism transforming into imperialism] is the substitution of capitalist monopolies for capitalist free competition. Free competition is the fundamental attribute of capitalism, and of the commodity production generally. Monopoly is the exact opposite of free competition; but we have seen the latter being transformed into monopoly before our very eyes, creating large-scale industry and eliminating small industry, finally leading to such a concertation of production and capital that monopoly has been and is the result: Cartels, syndicates, and trusts, and merging with them, the capital of a dozen or so banks manipulating thousands of millions.”[26]

Free competition, as the traditional capitalist means it, has never really existed in the PRC’s major industrial sectors. But what is the Chinese state, with its massive state-owned enterprises, if not a cartel, syndicate, or trust? And what is the Chinese financial sector, with its massive, state-owned banks manipulating thousands of millions, if not a financial capital monopoly?

China has massive excess savings and foreign reserves produced by its 1980s and 1990s manufacturing and export-driven economic boom. China’s state-owned enterprises are “sitting on piles of cash”, according to one recent study.[27] Since 2014, China has been the world’s top exporter of capital,[28] and in 2009, government-controlled state-owned enterprises made up $38.2 billion (67.6 percent) of China’s total outward direct investment.[29] Those trends have been driven by the rapid growth of the Chinese economy that concentrated capital in the large state-owned enterprises. That pattern led to several structural economic problems, most notably for our purposes, over-production and excess capital accumulation.[30]

The surplus capital sloshing around China made it necessary beginning in the 1990s for China to seek new avenues through which to direct its capacity and capital. At first, China embarked on massive in-country infrastructure projects and waves of urbanization.[31] Once internal growth slowed, those projects triggered over-capacity in China’s industrial sector, especially coal and steel, and so in 1999 China launched its “Going Global” policy of seeking external outlets for investment.[32] That search for external outlets has only intensified over the last decade as China has grown increasingly concerned its rent-seeking producers and excess capital might cause a destabilizing economic crisis. Its ill-defined Belt and Road Initiative is the now the primary, centrally directed mechanism to prevent an economic crisis and promote the internationalization of the economy.[33] BRI, then, is definitively imperialist, as Lenin defines it. “Under modern capitalism,” Lenin writes, “when monopolies prevail, the export of capital has become the typical feature.”[34]

Viewed through Lenin’s lens, it becomes clear what China is up to in the South China Sea. Southeast Asia is a key link in China’s BRI, specifically its 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, which aims to link China’s southern provinces to Southeast Asia via ports and railroads and then to the Middle East’s oil reserves and the Mediterranean Sea. BRI is the critical outlet for China’s outward investment. China plans to invest more than $1 trillion in the its Belt and Road routes, including high-speed trains, power plants, port expansion, highways, and other infrastructure investment as it seeks to resolve its chronic over-production issues and find an outlet for its excess capital.[35] Aside from infrastructure and investment, China also hopes to create special industrial zones throughout Southeast Asia and to enhance economic integration and interregional trade.[36] Like Lenin’s reviled banking conglomerates, one of the chief financing mechanisms behind the entire BRI project is the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank founded by China, which contributed $29.78 billion starting capital and has effective veto-power in the AIIB.[37] BRI is Lenin’s imperialism in 21st-century action.

Easing excess capital accumulation has not been the only goal of these external investments, either. Chinese companies have worked to secure throughout Southeast Asia the raw materials and energy resources necessary to continue to grow.[38] Among these are the potential gas and oil resources that sit below the waves of the South China Sea, as well as the mineral resources of some ASEAN countries. This too aligns with Lenin’s thesis of imperialism. “These monopolies are most firmly established when all the sources of raw materials are controlled by the one group. And we have seen with what zeal the international capitalist combines exert every effort to make it impossible for their rivals to compete with them; for example by buying up mineral lands, oil fields, etc. … Finance capital is not only interested in the already known sources of raw materials; it is also interested in the potential sources of raw materials, because present-day technical development is extremely rapid, and because land which is useless today may be made fertile tomorrow if new methods are applied.”[39]

Furthermore, as China transforms from an industrial state to a creditor state, it’s military plays an important enforcement role. Like other creditor nations before it, China profits doubly off the loans it extends to its more-impoverished Southeast Asian neighbors.  As Lenin puts it, “The increase in exports is closely connected with the swindling tricks of finance capital, which is not concerned with bourgeois morality, but with skinning the ox twice—first it pockets the profits from the loan, then it pockets other profits from the same loan which the borrower uses to make purchases”—now from Chinese companies.[40] This has been the case throughout Southeast Asia and the South China Sea. Moreover, countries like the Philippines now find themselves in debt traps that risk turning Chinese infrastructure projects built with Chinese materials into Chinese colonial possessions under the guns of Chinese boats. Much like Great Britain or America before it, China’s coast guard and navy “plays here the part of bailiff in the case of necessity.”[41]

“Great Britain’s political power protects her from the indignation of her debtors,” Gerhart von Schulze-Gaevernitz wrote.[42] Today, so does China’s.

Considering all these factors, China’s aggressive build up in the South China Sea is a natural outgrowth of its imperial policy and follows in the footsteps of empires before it. It is nothing if not a timeworn imperialist tradition. If China cannot guarantee control of the shipping routes in Southeast Asia, it cannot guarantee its lucrative investments, energy resources, and trade networks there. With its economy and the well-being of its party monopolists so reliant on external investment, resource development, and international trade, what choice does China have but to expand its military presence and capabilities in the region? Control of the South China Sea is a must.

Morality aside, China’s attempts to control the South China Sea are nothing the world hasn’t seen before. They are plain, old imperialism. And as with prior empires, they derive primarily from economic pressure inside its borders.

A Hegemonic Sea Change?

China, which believes it is the rightful imperial heir to the Southeast Asian sphere of influence, insists that its imperialist projects around the South China Sea align with its principle of “peaceful coexistence.” But Lenin was correct when he said “there can be no other conceivable basis under capitalism for the division of spheres of influence, of interests, of colonies, etc., than a calculation of the strength of the participants in the division … and the strength of these participants in the division does not change to an equal degree, for under capitalism the development of … countries cannot be even.[43] And so the South China Sea, now in disequilibrium because of China’s imperialist expansion, has been set up for a calamity.

In his book War and Change in World Politics, Robert Gilpin argues the world is traditionally organized by one of three structures: a single hegemonic power, a bipolar arrangement, or a multipower arrangement characterized by multiple powers in balance-of-power situations. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, the world has been organized by a single American hegemon that has been largely able to shape or influence the world according to its interests, including free trade, and to enforce those interests primarily through its overwhelming naval power. Since the 2008 financial crisis, however, the world has slipped into a bipolar arrangement with the explosion of the Chinese economy and the subsequent growth of its military and political power and prestige. A bipolar order, Gilpin says, is the most unstable and short-lived of world organizations and quickly slips into disequilibrium and, often, war.[44]

Two factors determine a country’s status in the world order: power and prestige. Power accounts for a nation’s economic, political, and military capacities to directly shape the world, while prestige accounts for the perceptions of other states regarding a nation’s willingness and capability to exercise its power.[45] China’s power and prestige have both been supercharged, especially in Asia, surprising much of the world.

The rise of a new power often startles the world and particularly the dominant power. Leon Trotsky explains that new powers do not – indeed cannot – follow the same developmental trajectory as the old. Instead, they borrow the technology and knowledge of those powers which have gone before to rise rapidly and shake the global order. As Trotsky says:

“Although compelled to follow after the advanced countries, a backward country does not take things in the same order. The privilege of historic backwardness – and such privilege exists – permits, or rather compels, the adoption of whatever is ready in advance of any specified date, skipping a whole series of intermediate stages.”[46]

China, in 1978, had the “privilege of historic backwardness.” Over the course of Deng Xiaoping’s Opening and Reform that began that year, however, China launched itself out of backwardness and into the ranks of the world’s advanced, or at least advancing, countries. It skipped the intermediate stages of development, borrowing instead economic, technical, and military ideas to go, in the span of 20 years, from Asian backwater to Asian power. Its power has grown by the year, especially in relative terms after the 2008 financial crisis devastated the global economy outside of China.[47] Gilpin argues that “as power of a state grows, it seeks to extend its territorial control, its political influence, and/or its domination of the international economy,” exactly what China has done in the South China sea since 2009.[48] China, in its growing self-confidence, claims new territory in the South China Sea by bringing to bear its political power because of its desire to control the economy in Southeast Asia. This, in turn, further enhances its political power and prestige in the region as the smaller countries come to grips with China’s goals and prestige – its willingness to do whatever necessary to achieve them. As Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte recently told Reuters about a conversation he had with Chinese Chairman Xi Jinping regarding competition for oil resources in the South China Sea, “We’re friends, we don’t want to quarrel with you, we want to maintain the presence of warm relationship, but if you force the issue, we’ll go to war.”[49] There is nothing the formerly bellicose Duterte can do about it.

China’s actions and attitude in the South China Sea illustrate Gilpin’s theory that “as relative power increases, a rising state attempts to change the rules governing the international system, the division of spheres of influence, and most important of all, the international distribution of territory. In response, the dominant power counters this challenge through changes in its policies that attempt to restore equilibrium in the system.”[50] Contemporary China ignores previously established rules governing freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, claims and builds new territory, and enlarges its sphere of influence in Southeast Asia. Those actions directly challenge the supremacy of the author and protector of the current order: The United States. The old status quo in the South China Sea favored the United States and its interests. Maintaining that status quo grows more difficult for the United States as, faced with diminishing returns, competing with China in Southeast Asia requires much greater financial costs to contest China’s ambitions with adequate power. It is not easy or cheap to control a sea on the other side of the world in the backyard of a rising power. “The principal external factor undermining the position of the dominant state is the increasing costs of dominance … Increases in the numbers and strengths of rival, challenging powers force the dominant state to expend more resources to maintain its superior military or political position,” Gilpin writes.[51] “There is a tendency for the economic costs of maintaining the international status quo to rise faster than the financial capacity of the dominant power to support its position and the status quo[52] … In these situations, the disequilibrium in the system becomes increasingly acute as the declining power tries to maintain its position and the rising power attempts to transform the system in ways that will advance its interests. As a consequence of this persisting disequilibrium, the international system is beset by tensions, uncertainties, and crises.”[53]

What is to be done, Mr. Gilpin?

The United States, Gilpin would argue, is now faced with two choices to resolve the global disequilibrium: appeasement or war.

For a declining power, Gilpin says the most attractive response to the rise of a challenger is to “eliminate the source of the problem. By launching a preventative war, the declining power destroys or weakens the rising challenger while the military advantage is still with the declining power … however, besides causing unnecessary loss of life, the greatest danger inherent in preventative war is that is sets in motion a course of events over which statesmen soon lose control.”[54] War cannot, or should not, any longer be an option for the United States. Power in the South China Sea has shifted too far in China’s favor. Against the military installations built up on islands through the sea as well as China’s swelling coastal naval capabilities, the United States stands to lose countless lives and waste uncountable sums in a full-scale war. While the United States’ military power undoubtedly still goes unrivaled in absolute brute force, the costs imposed by a status-quo maintaining war would be so high they would likely destroy the status quo anyway, leaving a void for a different power step into. Regardless, in the nuclear age, no one can afford to “lose control” of events. A hegemonic war between the United States and China in the South China Sea would certainly re-shape the status quo but not in a way either could predict or benefit from.

Gilpin offers a better, more difficult choice, one that would allow the United States to keep its power and most of its prestige and continue to maintain beneficial elements of the current world order—if Americans have the stomach to face the new reality in Southeast Asia. “The third means of bringing cost and resources into balance is, of course, to reduce foreign policy commitments. … The most direct method of retrenchment is unilateral abandonment of certain of a state’s economic, political, or military commitments … the third and most difficult method of retrenchment is to make concessions to the rising power and thereby seek to appease its ambitions.”[55] This the United States’ best course, though it is not an easy one to navigate.

It is time for the United States to give up on the South China Sea. It should shore up Taiwan, cede navigational control to China, and allow China to pursue its imperialist economic projects in Southeast Asia. As we have seen, China’s ambitions in Southeast Asia are primarily economic, not geostrategic. China seeks in the South China Sea to ensure its economic well-being and prevent an economic crisis that would harm China and the rest of the world. China’s designs, while not necessarily benevolent, nevertheless have largely positive impacts on the region, where it is simply replacing the United States as a dominant economic actor. As Gilpin predicts joining Lenin, “Although capitalist economies had an incentive to colonize the world, they also had an incentive to develop it.” That is what China is doing in Southeast Asia along its Maritime Silk Road. By retrenching at home, America can appease China’s ambitions, shore up America’s own economic situation, save lives and treasure, and begin finding its place in a new global equilibrium. It is not the easy choice, but it is the smart one.

Gilpin, however, might not be optimistic about the prospects:

“Throughout history the primary means of resolving the disequilibrium between the structure of international system and the redistribution of power has been war, more particularly, what we shall call a hegemonic war. … A hegemonic war is the ultimate test of change in the relative standings of the powers in the existing system. … The conclusion of one hegemonic war is the beginning of another cycle of growth, expansion, and eventual decline. The law of uneven growth continues to redistribute power, thus undermining the status quo established by the last hegemonic struggle. Disequilibrium replaces equilibrium and the world moves toward a new round of hegemonic conflict. It has always been thus and always will be, until men either destroy themselves or learn to develop an effective mechanism of peaceful change.” [56]

With a proper, Leninist view of China’s imperialist economic ambitions in the South China Sea and a better understanding based on Gilpin’s theory of global hegemonic transition, however, this time could be different.


[1] See for example, Phillip Chertoff’s “Behind China’s Ambitious Plan to Reshape World Power” (The Aspen Institute, May 7, 2018) or Michael Pillsbury’s The Hundred-Year Marathon: China’s Secret Strategy to Replace America as the Global Superpower (London: St. Martin’s Press, 2015).
[2] Pence, Mike, “Vice President Mike Pence’s Remarks on the Administration’s Policy toward China,” speech at the Hudson Institute (October 4, 2018).
[3] Allison, Graham, “The Thucydides Trap: Are the U.S. and China Headed for War?” (The Atlantic, September 24, 2015).
[4] Council on Foreign Relations, “Territorial Disputes in the South China Sea”, December 10, 2018, https://www.cfr.org/interactives/global-conflict-tracker#!/conflict/territorial-disputes-in-the-south-china-sea, accessed December 12, 2018.
[5] Xinhua, “China-ASEAN Trade Volume Hits Record High in 2017”, January 28, 2018.
[6] RAND Corporation, “At the Dawn of Belt and Road: China and the Developing World” (October 2018), 42.
[7] CNBC, “China Quietly Installed Defensive Missiles Systems on Strategic Spratly Islands in Hotly Contested South China Sea”, May 2, 2018.
[8] The U.S. Energy Information Administration, “The Strait of Malacca, a Key Oil Trade Chokepoint, Links the Indian and Pacific Oceans”, https://www.eia.gov/ (https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=32452, accessed December 4, 2018)
[9] Steinberg, David I., and Fan Hongwei. Modern China-Myanmar Relations: Dilemmas of Mutual Dependence (Copenhagen: Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, 2012), 168-169.
[10] Hongyi Harry Lai, “China’s Oil Diplomacy: Is it a Global Security Threat?” (Third World Quarterly, Vol. 28, No. 3, 2007), 534
[11] Lee, Pak K., “China’s Quest for Oil Security: Oil (Wars) in the Pipeline?” (The Pacific Review, Vol. 18, No. 2, June 2005), 289.
[12] RAND Corporation, “At the Dawn of Belt and Road: China and the Developing World” (October 2018), 42.
[13] South China Morning Post, “South China Sea is Beijing’s Top Foreign Policy Priority with Developing Nations, US Think Tank Says”, October 17, 2018.
[14] Nikko Asset Management, “The Rise of Chinese FDI in ASEAN”, October 5, 2017.
[15] U.S. Office of the Secretary of Defense, “Annual Report to Congress: Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China” (2018), 12-13.
[16] Ibid, 12-13.
[17] The New York Times, “China’s Sea Control is Done Deal, Short of ‘War with the U.S.’”, September 20, 2018
[18] Ibid.
[19] BBC, “South China Sea: Chinese Ships Force U.S. Destroyer Off Course”, October 2, 2018.
[20] Reuters, “Philippines Accuses China of Turning Water Cannon on Its Fishing Boats”, April 21, 2015.
[21] The New York Times, “China’s Sea Control is Done Deal, Short of ‘War with the U.S.”.
[22] [22] U.S. Office of the Secretary of Defense, “Annual Report to Congress: Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China” (2018), 12-13.
[23] CATO Institute, “A Balanced Threat Assessment of China’s South Sea Policy,” August 28, 2017.
[24] The New York Times, “China’s Sea Control is Done Deal, Short of ‘War with the U.S.”
[25] V.I. Lenin, Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism (New York: International Publishers, 1939)
[26] Lenin, Imperialism, 88.
[27] Lehmann, Tavares, Teresa, Ana, and Lehmann, Fredrick. “Outward Direct Investment by Chinese State-Owned Enterprises” (Competitiveness Review, Vol. 27, Issue 3, 2017) 231-52.
[28] Götken, Kerem, “One Belt, One Road: Capital Export with Chinese Characteristics” in Economic Issues in Retrospect and Prospect (London: IJPOEC Publications, 2018), 15.
[29] U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, “Going Out: An Overview of China’s Outward Direct Investment” (March 30, 2011), 6.
[30] Götken, “One Belt, One Road: Capital Export with Chinese Characteristics,” 15.
[31] Ibid, 15.
[32] Ibid, 5.
[33] Götken, Kerem, “One Belt, One Road: Capital Export with Chinese Characteristics”, 24.
[34] Lenin, Imperialism, 62.
[35]Götken, Kerem, “One Belt, One Road: Capital Export with Chinese Characteristics”, 19-20.
[36] Ibid, 19-20.
[37]Ibid, 19-20.
[38]Ibid, 17.
[39] Lenin, Imperialism, 82-83.
[40] Lenin, Imperialism, 116.
[41] Schulze-Gaevernitz, Gerhart von, Britischer Imperialisms (cited in Lenin, Imperialism, 101).
[42] Ibid, 101.
[43] Lenin, Imperialism, 119.
[44] Gilpin, Robert, War and Change in World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983), 29.
[45] Ibid, 31.
[46] Knei-Paz, Baruch, The Social and Political Thought of Leon Trotsky (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1978), PAGE)
[47] Despite a drop in its GDP growth rate, China continued to grow at nearly 10 percent through 2009. The United States shrunk 2.78 percent and the world 1.74 percent, according to data from the World Bank.
[48] Gilpin, War and Change in World Politics, 106
[49] Reuters, “Duterte says China’s Xi Threatened War if Philippines Drills for Oil”, May 17, 2018.
[50] Gilpin, War and Change in World Politics, 187.
[51] Ibid, 168-169.
[52] Ibid, 156.
[53] Gilpin, War and Change in World Politics, 197.
[54] Gilpin, War and Change in World Politics, 191.
[55] Gilpin, War and Change in World Politics, 191-193.
[56] Gilpin, War and Change in World Politics, 197-198.

The Personal was Political: Mao’s Foreign Policy from 1950-1976

Above all else, Mao Zedong was a revolutionary.

From 1949 to 1976, Chairman Mao ruled his People’s Republic of China, directing its actions inside and out. During the last 27 years of his life, the Great Helmsman steered his country from crisis to crisis as he battled to piece together his China, keep it whole and safe, and win recognition for the socialist nation that he had forged in the fires of revolution. Mao’s foreign policy decisions were directed in part by hostile geostrategic circumstances. But as importantly, they were driven forward by Mao’s personal desire for continuous revolution inside China – to tear down the structures of old China and erect a new, revolutionary edifice with Mao, the greatest revolutionary, sitting atop. Mao’s need to keep the revolution burning influenced the foreign policy decisions he made during the Cold War, from the Korean War to the Taiwan Crisis and from the Vietnam War to the final rapprochement with the United States. But like any hot fire, Mao’s revolution warped the structure of China’s foreign policy and left China increasingly brittle as the fires cooled.

Mao learned early the efficacy of using foreign policy to manipulate domestic forces to serve his revolutionary projects. The eruption of the Korean War in the summer of 1950 threatened China’s geostrategic position, but it also presented an opportunity for the Chinese Communist Party leadership. Having declared the establishment of the PRC from Tiananmen less than a year earlier, Mao saw in the Korean conflict a chance to re-direct pressure from outside of China to consolidate the CCPs power within it. [i] By resolutely confronting U.S. imperialism in Asia, Mao sensed he could bolster the revolutionary fervor of China’s people to legitimize the CCP’s authority as the new ruler of China and propel forward his plans to remake the country.[ii] Although failing to defeat the Americans in Korea would create a dangerous geostrategic problem for China, the fight itself would mobilize the revolutionary potential of the weary Chinese masses, and victory would enhance the CCP’s standing in a country still not yet fully united.[iii] It was, Mao decided, worth the risk. After months of propaganda, once American forces crossed into North Korea, China surged to war in October 1950. Hundreds of thousands dead and wounded was a high price, but Mao got what he paid for. By fighting the Americans to a stalemate over the next three years, he secured CCP rule and his own status as the resolute leader of a revolutionary movement.[iv]

But Mao had far grander plans for China, and by 1958 he was yanking the nation into his Great Leap Forward, a mass campaign intended to thrust China out of the agricultural dark ages and into the revolutionary future by rapid industrialization and collectivization. The Chairman, increasingly worried that growing discord with the Soviet Union threatened to dampen his dreams of revolution, saw an opportunity in Guomindang-held Taiwan to once again to stoke China’s revolutionary sentiment and build support for the Great Leap.[v] When the United States and Britain intervened to break a left-wing coup in Iraq in July 1958, protests erupted in Beijing, Shanghai, and other major Chinese cities. Mao had his official pretext to shell Taiwan: solidarity against Western imperialism.[vi] During the episode, Mao himself best elucidated his Cold War foreign policy: “Besides it’s disadvantageous side, a tense [international] situation can mobilize the population, can particularly mobilize the backward people, can mobilize the people in the middle, and can therefore promote the Great Leap Forward in economic construction. … Tension … is to our advantage in that it will mobilize all [our] positive forces … To have an enemy in front of us, to have tension, is to our advantage.”[vii] The timing, too, gave partial lie to the official justification. On August 23, two months after the Western intervention in Iraq, the People’s Liberation Army opened fire on Jinmen and Mazu Islands, just off the mainland coast. The shelling went on into October, at which time the CCP leadership began looking for a way out, having gotten the enthusiastic domestic response Mao sought. In the end, the Chairman simply left both islands in Taiwan’s hands. He understood the usefulness of having a ready-made enemy to play up China’s “victim mentality” to encourage nationwide mobilization.[viii]

With the shelling of Taiwan, Mao had gotten such mobilization, and China leapt into a great abyss. But by 1960, however, it was clear that Mao’s Great Leap Forward was a catastrophe, leaving the countryside in ruins and tens of millions dead from starvation.[ix] More important to the Chairman himself, however, the Great Leap dimmed Mao’s aura of “eternal correctness”, and his eternal revolution was in danger of melting away.[x] Revolution was in retreat across the country, so by the time the economy began to recover in 1962, Mao was preparing to leap again. Mao had learned his lessons well in the 1950s; if he were to restart his revolution and save his reputation, he needed another crisis, and he had one in America’s war in Vietnam. By creating the impression that China faced a serious counterrevolutionary threat there, Mao could rekindle the dying revolution at home and re-secure his authority as the head of the CCP. Vietnam was tricky, though. If China’s involvement led to a direct Chinese-American military confrontation, the unwinnable war could sabotage his revolution at home.[xi] From 1965-1969, China sent engineering troops, antiaircraft artillery troops, and military equipment and materials to North Vietnam but not the full military support the Vietnamese expected.[xii] Frustrated by Mao’s balancing act and diverging political opinions regarding the Soviet Union, the carefully built relationship between China and North Vietnam frayed and then unraveled.[xiii]

It was just one of many deteriorating relationships in the background of Mao’s foreign policy.[xiv] After Stalin’s death in 1953, Mao saw a chance to take his place at the head of the international revolutionary movement. New Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev gave his “secret speech” criticizing Stalin in 1956,[xv] and Mao decided he needed to root out China’s own Krushchevs—traitors who might criticize the Chairman’s revolutionary decisions—to begin a great purge and his final revolution.[xvi] In this atmosphere, from the late 1950s onward Mao engineered a series of incidents that alienated China from its erstwhile Soviet ally, using both the paranoia seeping from Sino-Soviet split as well as the “People’s War” in Vietnam to launch his Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. In 1966, China, more and more alone as a result of Mao’s foreign policy, descended madness and chaos, while the flames of student-led revolution raged everywhere, scorching even China’s last remaining friends in Burma, Cuba, and elsewhere Mao badge-bearing students and CCP-funded insurgencies spilled out of China’s borders.[xvii]

The old revolutionary’s great revolution failed. It could not build anything new, only burn and destroy. By 1969, belligerence and disfunction threated to bring Soviet bombs down on China, now totally alone.[xviii] Mao had a choice: burn with the revolution or save himself – now the unquestioned and unassailable revolutionary – and what was left of the edifice or rubble he had made. He chose the latter, and for one last time, Mao’s personal political ambitions drove his foreign policy. With the Soviet Union entrenched as the top imperialist enemy, Mao saw a chance to pull back from the brink of war by reaching out to the Americans.[xix] After shooting broke out on disputed Zhenbao Island and hundreds of thousands of troops massed along the Sino-Soviet border, Mao signaled to the newly elected President Richard Nixon in 1970 that he would be welcome in Beijing. Henry Kissinger’s secret 1971 visit followed, and Nixon himself came to China in 1972 for leader-to-leader talks—and to listen to Mao philosophize in the Chairman’s personal study.[xx] It would take seven more years for full relations to be restored and for China to begin its true recovery. Mao died before that in 1976, China’s great revolutionary lying amid the ashes of his revolution.


[i] Chen Jian. Mao’s China and the Cold War (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2001), Chapter 4, 85-117.
[ii] Ibid. Chapter 4, 85-117.
[iii] Waley-Cohen, Joanna. The Sextants of Beijing: Global Currents in Chinese History (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1999, digital edition), 288-290.
[iv] Ibid, 288-290.
[v] Westad, Odd Arne. Restless Empire: China and the World Since 1750 (New York: Basic Books, 2012), 337.
[vi] Chen Jian, Mao’s China and the Cold War, 175.
[vii] Chen Jian. Mao’s China and the Cold War, Chapter 7, 161-204.
[viii] Ibid. Chapter 7, 161-204.
[ix] Westad. Restless Empire, 336.
[x] Chen Jian. Mao’s China and the Cold War, 210.
[xi] Westad. Restless Empire, 348.
[xii] Chen Jian, Mao’s China and the Cold War. Chapter 8, 205-237.
[xiii] Westad. Restless Empire, 348.
[xiv] Ibid, 350-352.
[xv] Khan, Sulmaan. “The Cultural Revolution” (class lecture, The Foreign Relations of Modern China, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Medford, Massachusetts, November 2018).
[xvi] Chen Jian. Mao’s China and the Cold War.
[xvii] Khan, “The Cultural Revolution”.
[xviii] Westad, Restless Empire, 360.
[xix]Chen Jian, Mao’s China and the Cold War, Chapter 9, 238-276.
[xx] Ibid, Chapter 9, 238-276.

Confluences in Sino-Burmese Relations: Energy, Security, and India

Abstract

The relationship between China and Myanmar is an important geostrategic relationship in Asia. Beginning in the 1950s, China began to see Burma as an important, if neutral, partner to buffer itself against United States encirclement and demonstrate the efficacy of its “Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence”. Although the relationship deteriorated following China’s Cultural Revolution, it was revived in the 1990s after both countries became estranged from the international community. Today, China sees Myanmar as a critical gap in perceived US encirclement, a pathway to project power in the Indian Ocean to counter India’s capabilities, a means to develop a two-ocean navy, and route escape its dependence on shipping through the Straits of Malacca. India, meanwhile, has reacted to China’s penetration of Myanmar and is also working to develop closer ties to counter Chinese influence. Although the future is not without difficulties for China, including greater Western and popular Burmese influence, Chinese leaders will look to maintain their close relationship with Myanmar while holding India at bay.

Introduction

Burma is a confluence. It is a confluence of peoples, a confluence of cultures, a confluence of empires, and a confluence of powers – a place where the currents of history and geopolitics meet. Burma joins together China, India, and the peninsula that is home to Southeast Asia’s own empires and kingdoms. It links the great landmass of Asia to the Indian Ocean. From antiquity to the 21st century, Burma has been a place where the ambitions of powers converged as they jostled for influence and control. Burma’s own rulers and peoples, meanwhile, have fought to carve out their own existences and pursue their own goals in the shadow of larger, stronger neighbors from Britain to Japan and India to China. In turn Myanmar has tweaked geopolitics in ways that have shaped the world at large. Since the collapse of the colonial empires following the Second World War, Burma sashayed back and forth between independence and military rule, unity and separatism, all while trying to keep free of the great ideological struggles that dominated the second half of the 20th century. Myanmar has tried to remain safe, neutral, and independent of regional and global powers. That policy of neutrality, coupled with repressive military rule and civil war, has kept Burma isolated and largely free from outside interference, especially after its relationship with China disintegrated during China’s Great Proletarian Revolution in the mid-1960s.

But since 1989, the regrowth of the relationship between Burma, one of the poorest countries in the world, and China, one of the largest, fastest growing, and most powerful, has allowed for trade, aid, and investment links to blossom as China pursues its geostrategic objectives in South Asia and the Indian Ocean. By building close ties with Myanmar, China works to remain free from perceived American encirclement while pursuing a “two oceans strategy” to diversify its energy security and project power into the Indian Ocean and the countries that border it. The development of China and Myanmar’s relationship, subdued at first, become a growing concern in the 21st century for Burma’s other large neighbor, India, the world’s largest democracy. Burma is once again the confluence of the world’s two great rising powers, and its place at that confluence will have critical strategic implications for the 21st century.

 Historical Background

            Burma’s battle for autonomy defined its foreign relations throughout the Cold War, during which it joined India as a neutral, non-aligned state, largely in an attempt to constrain what it perceived as potential aggression from the newly established People’s Republic of China. From 1949 to 1967, Burma was a confluence of the ambitions of the United States and the People’s Republic of China, and its existence as such shaped China’s foreign policy throughout Asia as Mao Zedong and PRC fought to break free of United States containment. But confluences, too, have their own currents, and for nearly two decades until the Cultural Revolution sucked China back into its own backwaters, even little Burma nudged China’s foreign policy in new directions as Burma became a keystone of China’s early Cold War foreign policy.

From the establishment of the PRC in 1949, Burma, which has always been aware of its place in its giant eastern neighbor’s shadow,[1] believed China’s new communist government would not hesitate to attack Burma. Burmese leaders sought to avoid outright hostility by being the first non-communist nation to officially recognize the new PRC government.[2] Burmese Prime Minister U Nu joined India’s Jawaharlal Nehru and Indonesia’s Sukarno in believing his government could only maintain unity and create the space necessary to strengthen its domestic position by maintaining neutrality in the face of the two blocs competing for global alignment.[3] Keeping Burma’s distance from the PRC was difficult. In 1949, remnants of Guomingdang nationalist forces slipped into Burma’s troubled northeastern Shan State. They used the mountains as a base for drug trafficking and military operations in China along the un-demarcated and disputed 2,000-kilometer border. The Guomingdang also received support from American and Taiwanese intelligence services. Adding to those problems, Burmese officials worried that the some 350,000 overseas Chinese living in Burma in the 1950s might constitute a communist fifth column with which Beijing might subvert Burmese government control. China’s support for communist parties and insurgencies in Burma’s restive borderlands did not help to allay those fears. Stuck between the ambitions of China, the Soviet Union, and the United States, the Burmese leadership was acutely aware of its own insecurity.[4] Echoes of the GMD and Chinese immigrant problems exist in the current relations between Burma and China today, as does Burma’s awareness of its own insecure position between rival powers China, India, and the United States.

After a rocky beginning to the 1950s, by the middle of the decade, Beijing increasingly worried about American containment policy following the Korean War. In 1954, China created its “Five Principles of Coexistence” and made them the central pillars of its foreign policy.  That meant improving relations with smaller, nonaligned countries to create what Mao Zedong and the Chinese communist leadership hoped would be a zone of collective peace and security in Asia. Burma became a test-case for the new foreign policy direction. From 1954 until 1967, China and Burma cooperated to solve border and GMD issues and managed to successfully take care of both by the mid-1960s. Termed the Pauk-Phaw, or kinship, era, relations between China and Burma reached an all-time high point. It was a key demonstration of the efficacy of the “Five Principles” as China tried to build relationships with other developing countries to break out of American containment.[5]

In 1966, Mao launched his Cultural Revolution and the chaos soon spread to Burma where China attempted to export revolution with support (and rumor had it soldiers) for communist insurgencies against the new military dictatorship, which took power in a 1962 coup, in the unstable border regions. The huge Chinese community in Rangoon also radicalized, and slogan-shouting students wearing Mao badges soon overran schools in the capital. The Rangoon government closed schools, but anti-Chinese riots began in June of 1967. On June 26, more than 1,000 people assaulted the Chinese embassy. For two days after, mobs attacked Chinese communities across Burma. China recalled its ambassador, and severed relations with Rangoon, deepening the isolation it had created for itself due to its split with the Soviet Union and its 1962 war with India. For the next five years, Beijing would mostly go it alone.[6]

By the late 1970s, the destructive whirlwind of the Cultural Revolution at last died down. China began re-establishing relations with countries around the world, including the United States, as it returned to its previous policy of “peace” and “development”. Throughout Deng Xiaoping’s Reform and Opening in the 1980s, China de-ideologized its foreign policy. Burma’s strategic importance, however, had declined along with its importance as a buffer state once the PRC re-established diplomatic relations with the United States in 1979. Normalized relations with Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand followed, too. The improvement of China’s strategic position in South/Southeast Asia as a result, as well as lingering memories of the bad years from 1967-72, meant that China and Burma did not reestablish the warm relationship they had enjoyed from 1956-66. Adding to Burma’s difficulties, from 1962 to 1988 Burma had embarked on its own internal catastrophe. General Ne Win’s Burmese Way to Socialism decimated the Burmese economy, turning it into one of the poorest countries on earth.[7]

In1988, a nation-wide uprising known as the 8888 Movement rocked Burma until a bloody coup by General Saw Maung and his State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC) in September that year overthrew Ne Win. The new military junta killed thousands of protestors under martial law to quell the uprising. The incident, as well as SLORCs refusal to go along with the election results of 1990 that saw Aung San Suu Kyi arrested and her National League for Democracy (NLD) win 80 percent of the national vote, resulted in further international isolation and crippling economic sanctions. [8] In 1989, China’s Tiananmen Square massacre resulted in a similar international outcry, as well as economic sanctions. Those events laid the foundation for new international cooperation between Burma (re-named Myanmar in 1989) and China that has defined the post-Cold War currents and contemporary geopolitics in South Asia.[9]

The Contemporary Situation

SLORC military rule since 1988 meant that, until the relatively free and fair 2010 election and then the 2015 election that installed Aung San Suu Kyi as Burma’s de facto top leader after decades under house arrest, the armed forces dominated Myanmar’s domestic politics and international affairs. Repression and human rights violations in the past decades have led the West to regard Myanmar as a pariah state. Although the view improved after Aung San Suu Kyi’s election in 2015, the genocide against the Rohingya Muslim minority ethnicity that began that year and has continued unabated has once again dampened its international standing. According to the Fund for Peace “failed state index”, Myanmar ranks 22nd from the bottom of 178 countries in the world (a modest improvement since 2008, when it ranked 16th from the bottom).[10] South Sudan is ranked 1st, followed by Somalia and Yemen. Pakistan, another China-linked state, ranks 20th, two spots worse than Myanmar. The perception of Myanmar as a failed, rogue, or pariah state, has resulted in sporadic calls by the United States for regime change in Myanmar, and sanctions from both the U.S. and the E.U. have damaged an already feeble economy. These policies opened the door for Chinese – and now Indian – engagement where the West would not, while also bringing into opposition Chinese and Indian interests and western humanitarian priorities in Myanmar. Myanmar, Cold War neutrality forcibly abandoned, has had to rely almost exclusively on Chinese assistance since 1988, which has given China significant leverage with which to pursue its own strategic objectives in Myanmar and has resulted in a recent shift in Indian policy toward Myanmar to counter that influence.[11]

China’s Strategic Interests in Burma:

Chinese strategy in greater Asia might be best categorized under six primary objectives:

  • Maintain a stable environment on its periphery
  • Encourage economic ties that contribute to China’s economic modernization and thus to regime stability
  • Further isolate Taiwan and block moves toward its de jure independence
  • Convince others that China is not a threat
  • Increase China’s influence in East Asia, in part to prevent “containment” of China in the future
  • In Southeast Asia, secure recognition, as the most influential external Asian power[12]

 

Aiding these goals and perhaps forming a seventh key strategic interest is access to the Indian Ocean and the development of a “two-ocean strategy” via Pakistan and Burma.[13] Most critically, access to the Indian Ocean through Burma helps China accomplish several sub-goals, namely diversifying of its access to energy resources, countering Indian capabilities and influence in the Bay of Bengal, and evading perceived American encirclement. Each is a key goal for Beijing and reinforces the six objectives listed above. Each objective in Myanmar and the India Ocean bolsters China overall security situation, and each of them is linked to China’s most pressing security concern: The Straits of Malacca and Chinese energy security.

Tackling the Malacca Dilemma

Foremost among Beijing’s security concerns in Myanmar is developing access to the Indian Ocean. Beijing sees Myanmar as a key element of its “string of pearls” strategy that seeks to dominate the Indian Ocean by establishing a presence in Southeast Asia (Thailand and Cambodia), Myanmar, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan, as well as through the Seychelles and Maldives to Djibouti and Arabian Gulf. This string of ports operated by regimes friendly to China (or made friendly by Chinese investment, loans, or political and military ties) in theory provides China with both military and civilian bases to enhance its reach and security in the region.[14] Myanmar occupies a special place in that “string of pearls” due to its land border with China. Myanmar is central to Chinese attempts to secure its connection to the Middle East.

The unprecedented economic expansion China experienced in the 1990s and early 2000s was accompanied by an ever-growing need for energy resources to continue feeding economic growth. During that period, China became the world’s second-largest and fastest-growing energy consumer, and China’s energy imports have risen sharply in the last three decades, raising concerns about its energy security.[15] Oil supply, in particular, is a concern. As early as 1993, China became a net importer of oil, according to the International Energy Agency, which also estimates that by 2030 China will be the world’s largest oil consumer.[16] While China does produce some of its own oil, most of what it consumes today, either for industry or to meet growing demand for personal vehicles. China analysists now consider oil price shocks and potential supply disruptions – especially deliberate disruption on the part of a hostile power – to be the main threat to China’s energy security.[17]

Myanmar sits in a unique position to alleviate some of that threat since it can pump oil and gas directly to southern China by pipeline. Not only is Myanmar rich in oil and gas reserves waiting to be exploited by foreign companies or direct investment, it also provides a pathway for China to bypass one of its most pressing security concerns: The Straits of Malacca.

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, nearly one-third of the world’s liquid petroleum products transported by sea moved through the Straits of Malacca, only about 1.7 miles wide, in 2015.[18] Aside from minor imports from Russia overland, the majority of China’s oil arrives by sea, four-fifths of it through the Straits of Malacca. China’s People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) does not currently have the capability to secure the Southeast Asian straits, relying instead on the United States guarantee of freedom of navigation. China, which cannot prevent the U.S. from disrupting its sea lanes,[19] tends to view its oil security “through the prism of American-Japanese containment.”[20] China worries that a terrorist attack, natural disaster, or especially a military crisis with the United states over Taiwan could close the straits and cut off its oil supply. Myanmar provides a partial solution to the “Malacca dilemma.”[21] In May 2012, the China National Petroleum Corporation and Myanmar’s state-owned Oil and Gas Enterprise completed construction on a 1420-kilometer oil and gas pipeline running from a (Chinese-funded and leased) deep-water port on Kyaukphyu Island, which is also being developed as a special economic zone under China’s Belt and Road Initiative,[22] to China’s Yunnan Province. The pipeline went into operation in 2013, and in 2017 carried 3.87 million tons of crude oil through the 22-million-tons capacity pipeline, according to Xinhua News Agency.[23] Secondarily, the pipelines should also enhance economic growth in China’s poor southwestern provinces. Overall, the pipelines represent important progress for China’s geostrategy.

The pipelines, though easing oil security concerns, isn’t without its problems. To begin, Myanmar’s native oil and gas reserves, while large, cannot replace the Middle East as the primary provider of Chinese energy security, nor can the pipeline solve entirely the Malacca Dilemma; 22 million tons is only about 10 percent of the Malacca transmission capacity.[24] Furthermore, the Myanmar pipelines’ impact on China’s overall energy picture is relatively minor; it will handle only about 10 percent of China’s 2009 total oil imports and 3 percent of its projected 2030 demands. [25] All of that oil will still need to be transported from overseas first by tanker through the Indian Ocean, making it vulnerable to interdiction. Ships can hide, but pipelines also cannot be moved so Naypyidaw will have full control over the gas and oil pumping into China from Myanmar’s port. Furthermore, the pipeline passes through the troubled and mountainous Shan State and could be easily disrupted or destroyed by rebel armies there, as evidenced by the eruption of violence in 2009 and 2015 in the China-bordering Kokang region of the Shan State.[26] That is one reason for Beijing’s continued military aid to Myanmar. Stability in Myanmar not only prevents refugee issues along the border and props up a China-friendly government, it also protects Chinese energy security.

Problematic or not, the construction of the Sino-Myanmar pipeline steadies the relationship between China and Myanmar and works to counter Indian influence in the Myanmar, which is another major strategic objective for China.

As Xiamen University scholar Zhao Hong notes:

Myanmar is of special importance to China, and the shift in New Delhi’s stance has thus generated a sense of rivalry between the two for the affections of Myanmar, from the tangibles of trade and investment to the intangibles of cooperation and support for their respective regional influence. China and India are all anxious to tap Myanmar’s huge oil and gas reserves. China and India are also seeking access, through Myanmar, to the Indian Ocean to help open their poor landlocked provinces in their southwest and northeast respectively.[27]

Multiple Concerns

Security of oil and gas, then, is not China’s only or interest in Myanmar. Since the beginning of the Cold War, Chinese leaders have considered Myanmar to be a geostrategic buffer zone, first against American encirclement, and then later in rivalries with the Soviet Union and the Vietnamese communists.[28] It is a primary reason for the PRC’s 1954 adoption of the “Five Principles of Coexistence” as its foreign policy pillars and its willingness to accept neutral or non-aligned Burma as a partner in creating a peaceful Asia. That “buffer zone” mentality still exists among China’s leadership, which feels particularly threatened by great powers controlling Southeast, Northeast, or South Asia, Myanmar provides an important gap in two of those regions.[29]

Since the 1990s, India has become China’s main competitor in Myanmar and more broadly in the Indian Ocean. World instability has risen at the same time as China has increased investments in South Asia, Africa, and beyond, especially as part of its amorphous and ever-expanding Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Concerns about instability or violence damaging Chinese interests or investments in those spheres has accelerated Chinese upgrades to its naval capabilities to secure its investments and participate in global rescue operations.[30] China now hopes to field a competent blue water not only in the politically dicey East and South China Seas but also in the Indian Ocean, where piracy is rife.

China has grown wary of India’s own burgeoning naval capabilities. With a competent Indian navy in the Bay of Bengal, China worries not only about a U.S. shutdown of the Malacca Straits but also about India’s ability to embargo its critical oil tanker traffic en route to its ports in either Pakistan or Myanmar. The development of Indian cooperation with Southeast Asia—including with Myanmar—and with the United States has heightened China’s worries. By improving its access to the Indian Ocean, China hopes to counter Indian militarization and keep an eye and ear on Indian military activities such as submarine traffic and missile tests throughout the region.[31] The PLA Navy in recent years has also put significant money into purchasing a wide array of weapons designed to augment its still-weak naval capabilities, including anti-ship and anti-aircraft missiles, long-range ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, air defense systems, attack aircraft, and land-to-sea and land-to-air missiles. It’s also invested significant energy into enhancing its submarine fleet to counter superior surface naval capabilities.[32]

As mentioned earlier, Myanmar forms a key piece of the “string of pearls” encircling the Indian subcontinent. While unsubstantiated rumors of military forward bases along Myanmar’s coast and other pieces of pearl have persisted for years, they have yet to materialize. That does not preclude them from doing so in the future, however, and has not necessarily allayed fears in India and elsewhere.[33] If forward naval bases ever do appear in Myanmar, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, or elsewhere, they would greatly enhance China’s force projection capabilities throughout the Indian Ocean at the price of ratcheting up tensions, but simple civilian ports for refueling and resupply already empower Chinese fleets. China hopes its investments in Myanmar yield gains beyond the Indian Ocean, too. China hopes that Myanmar’s participation in ASEAN will give it some leverage over how the association deals with territorial disputes involving China in the South China Sea. By building close ties with Myanmar, China hopes to pressure Myanmar into siding with China in disputes regarding its naval and commercial ambitions in the Pacific, as well as the Indian Ocean.[34] In short, China wants to become a naval power in both oceans.

Overall Zhao Hong sums up Myanmar’s strategic importance for China:

Myanmar is not only a potential supply route bypassing the Malacca Strait, but also a strategic point for controlling access to Malacca Strait’s western approaches. While controlling the Malacca Strait is a key objective of China to the point of risking armed conflict with the regional states and the U.S., access to Myanmar’s ports and overland transportation routes through Myanmar is seen as a vital and strategic security asset for China.[35]

Stable Relations

None of these objectives will be possible for China to achieve without maintaining a climate of stability within the notoriously unstable Myanmar. That makes local stability a de facto objective for Beijing, especially along its border. Relations between the Beijing, the PLA, and Myanmar’s military, the Tatmadaw, have expanded substantially since 1988, and the size of the Tatmadaw has increased massively in that time, as well.

Since the 1962 coup, the Tatmadaw has been the effective ruler of Myanmar, either indirectly or directly.[36] The military’s perception of threats to its state fall under two categories, although the two are intertwined: internal rebellion, especially from dozens of disparate minority peoples spread across Myanmar, and external invasion, first in the early years of Burmese independence by China, then in the last few decades by the United States, which until the 2010 elections had consistently and loudly called for regime change. Fear of invasion, however unwarranted, and international isolation following the 1988 crackdown have pushed the Tatmadaw close to the Chinese.[37]

Although accurate numbers are difficult to come by, some estimates say since the beginning of the SLORC administration in 1988, the Chinese supplied Myanmar’s military with more than $3 billion dollars in military hardware up to 2010. The equipment includes naval vessels, aircraft, weapons, radar systems, rocket launchers, and various types of other vehicles.[38] Still, the extensive military assistance China has provided the Tatmadaw is neither designed, nor sufficient, to allow Myanmar to defend itself against major external aggression from the United States or one of its allies such as Thailand, which has used its proxy armies in the Sothern Shan State to skirmish with Burma’s surrogate ethnic militia, the Wa State Army.[39] In echoes of the early Cold War when GMD forces and local insurgencies created instability and insecurity along the China-Burma border, proxy armies and rebels such as the Wa State and Kokang rebel groups are among China’s largest concern. As noted earlier, China’s oil and gas pipelines and overland transportation routes run through restive territories in the Shan State’s Kokang region that are controlled by ethnic armies. Although many of Burma’s ethnic armies have signed at least temporary ceasefires with the Myanmar government, violence never seems far away, erupting in Kokang alone in 2009 and again in 2015.[40] China worries that new outbreaks of civil war might disrupt the links its built through Myanmar. Chinese arms sales, training, and technical assistance, then, is calculated not to repel external invasion but to curry favor with Myanmar’s military regime and to ensure its internal stability thus minimizing threats to its pipelines and other investments and keeping open China’s strategic opportunities in Myanmar. [41]

India’s Response

            If China’s interests vis-à-vis Myanmar are driven by fears of containment, real or perceived, then so is India’s interest in Myanmar driven by fear of Chinese containment, real or perceived.

These days, the Sino-Indian relationship is relatively stable despite ongoing disputes along the mutual border. Even regarding Myanmar, before and immediately after the 1988 coup both countries saw benefit in concentrating on “anti-hegemonic cooperation” and avoiding facing up to their divergent interests there and in the abutting ocean.[42] The relationship was not always so affable. In 1962, war broke out across sectors of the still-contested border Sino-Indian border, including along India’s northeastern edge in Arunachal Pradesh, which also shares a border with Burma. Throughout, Burma remained “neutral in China’s shadow.”[43]

After the 1988 Burma coup and 1989 Tiananmen massacre, under the weight of sanctions levied against it, Myanmar eased its foreign policy to align more closely with China’s.[44] China became the prime supplier of Myanmar’s military needs and, not unlike today, assisted SLORC with extensive infrastructure projects including airfields, roads, ports, dams, and railroads. [45] India’s policy toward Myanmar, meanwhile, turned anti-military. Rajiv Gandhi’s government became one of the world’s most vocal critics of the SLORC junta, even as the prime minister expanded India’s engagement in Nepal, the Maldives, and Sri Lanka. Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination in 1991 and the increasingly obvious depth of China’s penetration into Myanmar, however, caused a dramatic shift in India. By 1993, India began to believe Myanmar’s traditional neutrality had been discarded. [46] In 1993, despite criticism from the West and advocacy groups, the world’s largest democracy shifted its policy in Myanmar away from one focused on anti-junta human rights to a pragmatic support of Myanmar’s military government. “The main reason for India’s shift was the growing concern and uneasiness over Myanmar’s abandonment of its traditional ‘strategic neutrality’ policy and strategic tilt toward China.”[47]

Vibhanshu Shekar describes the shift in approach:

Such an approach, variously dubbed as ‘pragmatism,’ ‘constructive engagement’, or ‘inclusive approach’, has been based on two-fold understanding” improbability of ascendancy of democratic regime in Myanmar; and the previous experience of the more India isolates the military regime, the more its geo-strategic concerns are compromised.[48]

India’s Strategic Interests

India’s strategic interests in Myanmar after 1993 fall into two main categories:

  • Countering Chinese naval power and perceived encirclement in the Indian Ocean, especially the Bay of Bengal
  • Pacifying India’s volatile northeast states along the Myanmar border, which has been a haven for anti-government rebels, and improving their economic outlook to increase stability in both countries

India has long considered the entire Indian Ocean, and especially the Bay of Bengal, to be its ocean.[49] India once operated a major naval base from the Andaman Islands and conducted missile tests off its east coast into the Bay of Bengal.[50] Since the 1962 war and India’s embarrassing defeat, China has hardly perceived India to be a threat or rival. The reverse has not been true. Chinese construction of port facilities along the Myanmar coast concerned the leadership in Delhi, even raising fears that the PLAN might construct military bases there. From Delhi’s vantage, by the 1990s it had China to the north, China-aligned Pakistan to the west, and China-aligned Myanmar to the east. With both its neighbors safely within China’s sphere of influence, India was effectively surrounded by land.[51] The development of Chinese facilities with refueling and servicing facilities—let alone actual military bases, if they ever do appear—in Myanmar further elevated capabilities for China’s developing navy.  Added to Chinese ports in Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and minor islands throughout the Indian Ocean and India began to see itself as potentially surrounded by both land and sea. Despite the relatively cordial relations between the two countries, India tends to treat China’s capabilities, rather than its intentions, seriously so any increase in China’s military capabilities or strategic positioning necessarily concern New Delhi,.[52] India believes closer relations with Myanmar might counterbalance China’s attempts to dominate its politics. In March of this year, India and Myanmar participated in their first-ever joint naval exercise, which comes on the heels of other joint peacekeeping and anti-terrorism exercises along the border.[53]

That’s the other major security concern for India, it’s northeastern region, where India, China, and a smorgasbord of rebel groups of both Indian and Myanmarese origins have engaged in various short-term alliances of convenience over the past several decades. At various times, India has supported the anti-government Chin armies in Burma,[54] China has supported (especially with guns and ammunition) anti-government armies in both Myanmar and India, depending on their shifting goals in the region.[55] In general, however, since the 1988 coup India supported anti-SLORC insurgencies in Myanmar to destabilize the government in Rangoon. After the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi and from 1993 onward, especially after rebel groups in Kachin (the northernmost state) negotiated a ceasefire with SLORC, the Indians began to reevaluate their policy in the borderlands.[56] “It was argued that India had achieved nothing by supporting the resistance. On the contrary, it was argued that these tactics had pushed the Burmese further into the hands of the Chinese. New Delhi decided to counter the Chinese by moving closer to Rangoon.”[57] By 1994, multiple high-level Indian officials had visited Rangoon and signed agreements for expanding land links between the countries, as well as economic assistance and trade agreements.[58]

Steinberg and Fan suggest that since 1993, India’s policy toward Myanmar – and peripherally, then, China – can be organized into three stages: security-centric engagement (1993-1997), “look-east” engagement (1998-2004), and develop-North-East engagement (2004 onwards).[59] In the first period, India tried to limit Chinese influence in Myanmar, especially its activities along the Bay of Bengal, while also trying to limit the growing insurrection in India’s northeast, where Myanmar’s porous border became a sanctuary for anti-government rebels.[60]

The second stage coincided with India’s “Look East” policy toward Southeast Asia, including Myanmar’s joining the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in 1997. The formation of the Bangladesh-India-Myanmar-Sri Lanka-Thailand Economic Cooperation organization that year gave India an avenue to improve relations throughout ASEAN and to keep an eye on China’s activities in Southeast Asia after China signed the ASEAN Treaty of Amity and Cooperation in October 2003.[61]

Lastly, the third stage of Indo-Myanmar relations relates to the development of India’s northeast regions, which are plagued by poverty, ethnic tensions, and outright rebellion. India’s northeast lacks cheap, easy access to the heart of India, so development there might dampen unrest in the region and also develop better relations with Myanmar across the border. Throughout the 2000s, India and Myanmar have agreed and build road and rail systems across the border, even as India also provides Myanmar with some economic aid.[62] India hopes continued cooperation along the Indo-Myanmar border might calm the restive region, improve the region’s economic outlook, and be a win-win for both countries. India has already gone ahead on several infrastructure projects to do just that. This year, India handed over to Myanmar operations of an Indian-constructed deep-water port at Sittwe. The port is one part of the ambitious Multi Modal Transit Transport Project that links Kolkata to Sittwe on the Bay of Bengal by sea, Sittwe to Myanmar’s Paletwa by river, and Paletwa to the Indian border by highway.[63] The project aims to create jobs throughout northwestern Myanmar, facilitate easier trade, and cut down the travel time to India’s northeastern states. Until the project is completed in 2019-2020, goods have to travel an extra three to four days and 1,328 kilometers through narrow the Siliguri Corridor, known as the “chicken’s neck” and threatened by Chinese military buildup in the Doklam heights overlooking the corridor.[64] Similar projects are in the works.

In each of these phases, strategic concerns have trumped pro-democracy and humanitarian concerns, something that’s unlikely to change given India’s desire to counterbalance China’s influence in the country. One researcher properly sums up India’s policy since 1993:

Change in Myanmar will very unlikely see the advent of democracy. India should therefore bank on a military regime, but try to enhance its reliability. The evolution of the Burmese junta into an illiberal but efficient regime and could satisfy India’s needs in the mid-term … India, for economic reasons as well as security considerations would stand to gain greatly if such reforms were to be adopted, and should thus, along with China and ASEAN, try to exert pressure on the military junta in this direction.[65]

Going Forward

            For the Chinese, the importance of Myanmar is unlikely to diminish any time soon, so central are its interests in the region and so well-positioned is Myanmar to serve them. For India, then, Myanmar’s importance is also unlikely to diminish as it works to counter Chinese influence there. Although Myanmar provides China with a plethora of opportunities with which to increase its strategic reach in Asia, it also presents some distinct challenges.

China continues to invest heavily in infrastructure, energy, and port projects in Myanmar, much of it under the auspices of its Belt and Road Initiative, although recent events have complicated its position.[66] After the relatively fair and stable 2010 election, Western countries including the United States began to normalize relations with Myanmar, more so after Aung San Suu Kyi and her NDL consolidated their leadership in the 2015 election. That allowed greater western influence, investment, and aid in Myanmar ($60 million from the U.S. since 2012)[67], although the picture has clouded some considering the Rohingya crisis that remains ongoing. The opening of Myanmar to Western influence could be double-edged for China, which would benefit from greater investment and stability but would also lose some of its patron status over Myanmar. The end of strict military rule also means that China now must maintain relations with not only the Tatmadaw and military leaders but also with the civilian government, two parties which may not always have aligned priorities.[68]

One typical, unresolved, and representative issue of this new era is the Myitsone Dam project on Myanmar’s major lifeline, the Irrawaddy River. The dam, which was approved the by the military government, slated to be completed in 2017 by joint Chinese-Myanmar construction and which was intended to supply 6,000 megawatts of power mostly to China’s Yunnan province, came under heavy public criticism over its potential environmental and cultural impacts.[69] That those impacts would come at the expense of Myanmar to provide power to China only deepened public anger. Following the establishment of the new, democratic government in 2011, Naypyidaw pulled the plug on the project, reversing the military junta’s previous agreement and angering China, which had already invested more than $800 million dollars in the $3.6 billion project.[70] The halt on the project, which remains ongoing despite China’s attempts to get it restarted, has been hailed as a triumph on the new democratic regime, which took public opinion over the dam into account for its decision.[71] It signals a new direction in bilateral relations, one where China will not necessarily have the ability to simply strongarm Myanmar into doing what it wants.

Another major issue that might illuminate future problems has been the Kokang conflict that flared up again in 2015 between the Tatmadaw and the rebel Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army, which fights for greater autonomy from Naypyidaw. In February 2015, rebels attacked army positions in Kokang, and over the next four months fighting drove between 40,000 and 50,000 refugees, mostly mandarin-speaking ethnic Chinese, across the Chinese border.[72] The eruption of hostilities in Kokang pointed the way to future problems, reminding the Chinese of the threat instability poses to its investments in the border regions and to its citizens there. As Chinese investments become more concrete, too, the Chinese government’s financial leverage over Myanmar shifts and the Naypyidaw government will gain more leverage to get either get what it wants from Beijing or create distance between the two regimes. Disruption of China’s energy supplies or trade obviously runs counter to China’s main strategic objectives in Myanmar. Myanmar will realize that China needs Myanmar as much, if not more, than Myanmar needs China. It also will need to realize it can only push China so far lest China cut off aid and return to former policies supporting rebel groups in places like Kokang.[73]

The Kokang violence, with its ethnic Chinese refugees, elucidates a third problem for Beijing going forward, one linked to public opinion and Myitsone project. New waves of Chinese migration threaten to disrupt the good relations. Over the last few decades, private Chinese have poured across the border, both legal and illegal. Unlike previous waves of Chinese migrants, many of the newer additions show little interest in adopting Burmese culture and dominate the local economies, stirring up ethnic resentment.[74] In the past, Beijing has worried little about public feelings toward its activities in Myanmar, being content to get the agreement of the military government.[75] The Myitsone halt and the Kokang fighting with its allegations that Chinese mercenaries joined the MNDAA,[76] both demonstrate that China will need to be more sensitive to problems Chinese immigration might cause for its diplomatic relations. Both countries quietly accuse each other of not handling the unrest in Kokang properly, and although they continue to cooperate along the border, the conflict should serve as a reminder of difficulties that could continue to crop up in the border regions.[77] If China wishes to continue to maintain its preeminent position in Myanmar and look after its security interests, sensitivity and better use of soft power is a must. Of top priority to Beijing will be ensuring that the Myanmar government, whatever form it takes, is amenable to their interests. To that end, China will need to support moderate reforms that will prevent instability and future popular unrest, even as it also builds closer ties to rebel groups like the MNDAA in its borderlands to pressure Myanmar away from a tectonic shift in its foreign relations policy.

Lastly, just like the early days of the Cold War, Myanmar presents an opportunity for China to hold up good relations with Myanmar as a model to other countries with which it hopes to improve relations, notably other Southeast Asian countries. The goal here should be to demonstrate that Beijing will pursue its interests, but not domination, in its neighbors, holding up Myanmar as a potential model for benign, peaceful Asian relations. If it can do so successfully, it may be able to influence not only the Indian Ocean but the South China sea as well, all while maintaining the energy-import diversification China sees as central to its security without unnecessary provocation in New Delhi.

India, meanwhile, will continue to be on its back foot, mostly responding to Chinese development rather than directing the relationship. At best, India should continue to offer an alternative to Beijing, allowing Myanmar to pursue a strategy of “closer to each than they are to each other”. By working with Myanmar along its border and its coast, India can build closer bilateral civil and military relations while also creating a more stable situation in its northeastern states.

Including the $480 million Kaladan river project that includes the Sittwe port, the Indian government has already provided $1.75 billion worth of grants and credit for infrastructure projects[78] such as a Yangon-Mandalay rail link. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is in talks about upgrading highway links between the two countries, too.[79] India, for example, is building the trilateral India-Myanmar-Thailand Highway, which is now slated to be finished in 2020, six years later than it was originally planned.[80] It is just one of several highway systems approved for construction that will not only provide India with better access to Myanmar’s poorest regions but also to the rest of Southeast Asia, if they are completed as planned. India has also begn construction highways in areas such as Manipur, linking India’s Nagaland to northwestern Myanmar. They will also enhance economic growth and security in poor and unstable regions along the border.

Beyond infrastructure, India has a soft power advantage in human resources that it should continue to cultivate. Since 2015, the International Institute of Information Technology, Bangalore, has worked with the Myanmar Institute of Information Technology to improve Myanmar’s information technology education. The partnership demonstrates that India is better positioned than China to aid in developing education and skills training in Myanmar.[81]

By continuing to emphasize the relationship over human rights concerns, including the Rohingya crisis that has slowed some construction projects, India can expand its footprint in Myanmar and counterbalance China’s power in the Indian Ocean. As problems with China’s investments like the Myitsone Dam continue to crop up around the world and popular backlash damages China’s reputation in Southeast Asia, India should sit back, bide its time, and anticipate Chinese overreach and retrenchment. A careful, nonaggressive balancing act will allow India to position itself for an improving relationship with Myanmar, especially as Myanmar tries to reduce its overdependence on China, overdependence that it’s lived under for more than 30 years.


[1] Thomson, John Seabury, “Burma: A Neutral in China’s Shadow.” (The Review of Politics, Vol. 19, No. 3, July 1957), 330-350.
[2]Steinberg, David I., and Fan Hongwei. Modern China-Myanmar Relations: Dilemmas of Mutual Dependence (Copenhagen: Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, 2012).
[3] Ibid, 19.
[4] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar, 28-92.
[5] Ibid, 28-92.
[6] Ibid. 93-130.
[7] Steinberg and Fan, Modern Chinese-Myanmar Relations, 131-151.
[8] Oxford-Burma Alliance, “1988 Uprising and 1990 Election”, oxfordburmaalliance.org (http://www.oxfordburmaalliance.org/1988-uprising–1990-elections.html, accessed December 4, 2018).
[9] Fan Hongwei, “China-Burma Geopolitical Considerations in the Cold War” (Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs, Vol. 31, Issue 1, 2012).
[10] The Fund for Peace, “Fragile States Index, 2018”, http://fundforpeace.org/fsi/ .
[11] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 159.
[12] Percival, Bronson. The Dragon Looks South: China and Southeast Asia in the New Century (Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Security International, 2007), 5.
[13] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 307.
[14] Swanstrom, Niklas. “Sino-Myanmar Relations” (Institute for Security and Development Policy, Asia Paper, June 2012), 15.
[15] World Energy Outlook 2017: China, International Energy Agency.
[16] Ibid.
[17] Downs, Erica S., “The China Energy Security Debate” (The China Quarterly, No. 177, March 2004), 31.
[18] The U.S. Energy Information Administration, “The Strait of Malacca, a Key Oil Trade Chokepoint, Links the Indian and Pacific Oceans”, https://www.eia.gov/ (https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=32452, accessed December 4, 2018).
[19] Hongyi Harry Lai, “China’s Oil Diplomacy: Is it a Global Secuirty Threat?” (Third World Quarterly, Vol. 28, No. 3, 2007), 534.
[20] Lee, Pak K., “China’s Quest for Oil Security: Oil (Wars) in the Pipeline?” (The Pacific Review, Vol. 18, No. 2, June 2005), 289.
[21] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 168-169.
[22] The Myanmar Times, “Kyaukphy Port: What happens next?”, November 9, 2018.
[23] Xinhua, “Oil Piped from Myanmar Hits 3.9 Mln Tonnes in 2017”, January 26, 2018.
[24] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 173.
[25] Seaman, John, “Energy Security, Transnational Pipelines and China’s Role in Asia” (IFRI Asie Visions, 27, April 2010), 38.
[26] Chao Chung-Chi, “The Kokang Conflict and Contradictory Relations between China and Burma” (Asian Ethnicity, Vol 16, No. 4, 2015), 589-592.
[27] Zhao Hong, “China and India: Competing for Good Relations with Myanmar” (The Journal of East Asian Affairs Vol 22, No. 1, Spring/Summer 2008), 179.
[28] Fan Hongwei, “China-Burma Geopolitical Considerations in the Cold War”.
[29] Nathan, Andrew, and Ross, Robert S., The Great Wall and the Empty Fortress: China’s Search for Security (New York: W.W. Norton, 1997), 171, cited in Steinberg, Modern China-Myanmar Relations.
[30] Swanström, Niklas. “Sino-Myanmar Relations: Security and Beyond” (Institute for Security and Development Policy, Asia Paper, June 2012), 15.
[31] Steinberg, David I., and Fan Hongwei. Modern China-Myanmar Relations: Dilemmas of Mutual Dependence (Copenhagen: Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, 2012), 174.
[32] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations.
[33] Ibid.
[34] Ibid.
[35] Zhao Hong, “China and India: Competing for Good Relations with Myanmar”.
[36] Fan Hongwei, “China-Burma Geopolitical Considerations in the Cold War”.
[37] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 151.
[38] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 302.
[39] Ibid, 310.
[40] Chao Chung-Chi, “The Kokang Conflict and Contradictory Relations between China and Burma”.
[41] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 302.
[42] Garver, John W. Protracted Contest: Sino-Indian Rivalry in the Twentieth Century (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2001).
[43] Thomson, John Seabury, “Burma: A Neutral in China’s Shadow.” (The Review of Politics, Vol. 19, No. 3, Jul., 1957), 330-350.
[44] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 315.
[45] Ibid, 315.
[46] Ibid.
[47] Shee, Poon Kim. “The Political Economy of China-Myanmar Relations: Strategic and Economic Dimensions” (Ritsumeikan Annual Review of International Studies, Vol. 1, 2002).
[48] Shekar, Vibhanshu, “A Federal Democratic Myanmar: India’s Strategic Imperative” (Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi, IPCS Issue Brief No. 67, May 2008).
[49] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 318.
[50] Ibid, 318.
[51] Ibid, 318.
[52] Ibid, 318-319.
[53] The International Institute for Strategic Studies, “India Boosts Relations with Myanmar, where Chinese Influence is Growing” (June 1, 2018, iiss.org), https://www.iiss.org/blogs/analysis/2018/05/india-myanmar-china-relations, accessed 12/13/2018/
[54] Selth, “Burma and the Strategic Competition Between China and India (Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 19, Issue 2, 1996), 218.
[55] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 319.
[56] Egreteau, Renaud, “India’s Ambitions in Burma: More Frustration than Success?” (Asian Survey, Vol. 48, No. 6, November/December 2008), 940.
[57] Lintner, Bertil, “The Indo-Burmese Frontier” (Jane’s Intelligence Review, 1 January 1994, cited by Steinberg and Fan, 320)
[58] Selth, Andrew. “Burma and the Strategic Competition Between China and India” (The Journal of Strategic Studies, 24 January 2008), 213-230.
[59] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 321.
[60] Ibid, 321-322.
[61] Ibid, 321-322.
[62] Ibid, 321-322.
[63] The Irrawaddy, “India, Myanmar Appoint Operator for Sittwe Port Project” (October 26, 2018).
[64] Ibid.
[65] Levesque, Julien, “A Reformed Military Junta in Myanmar in India’s Strategic Interests” (Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi, IPCS Issue Brief No. 69, May 2008.)
[66] The Diplomat, “Can Myanmar Afford China’s Belt and Road?” (August 29, 2018)
[67] The Irrawaddy, “China Taking Active Steps to Counter Western Influence.”
[68] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 354
[69] Reuters, “Myanmar Suspends Controversial Myitsone Dam” (September 30, 2011).
[70] The New York Times, “A Chinese-Backed Dam Project Leaves Myanmar in a Bind” (March 31, 2017).
[71] BBC, “Burma Dam: Work Halted on Divisive Myitsone Project” (September 30, 2011).
[72] Oxford Analytica Daily Brief Service, “Myanmar: Kokang Conflict will Damage China Ties” (Oxford Analytica, February 26, 2015).
[73] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 355.
[74] Thant Myint-U, Where China Meets India: Burma and the Crossroads of Asia (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012).
[75] Steinberg and Fan, Modern China-Myanmar Relations, 356.
[76] Asia News Monitor, “Myanmar (Burma): China and Burma, Not Only Pauk-Phaw” (July 7, 2017).
[77] Ibid.
[78] The Times of India, “Eye on China, India Speeds Up Infra Projects in Myanmar” (October 26, 2017).
[79] The Diplomat, “Myanmar’s Approach to India” (March 29, 2018).
[80] The Times of India, “Eye on China, India Speeds Up Infra Projects in Myanmar”.
[81] The Diplomat, “Myanmar’s Approach to India.”